Why this chapter matters for UPSC: India's location is foundational to understanding its foreign policy, trade strategy, and security doctrine. Questions on India's maritime boundaries, neighbouring countries, the Indo-Pacific, QUAD, and SAGAR doctrine appear regularly in both Prelims and Mains. The Tropic of Cancer passing through 8 states is a classic Prelims trap.


PART 1 — Quick Reference Tables

Table 1: India's Key Geographic Coordinates

ParameterValueSignificance
Latitudinal extent8°4'N to 37°6'NPlaces India mostly in tropics and sub-tropics
Longitudinal extent68°7'E to 97°25'ESpans ~29° → ~2-hour time difference East to West
Standard Meridian82°30'EIST = UTC+5:30; passes through Mirzapur/Naini, UP
Total area~3.28 million km²7th largest country in the world
Coastline length~7,516.6 km (traditional figure; ~11,099 km per Survey of India 2024 revision, including islands)One of the longest coastlines in Asia
EEZ2.37 million km²Rich in marine resources; strategic naval space

Table 2: Tropic of Cancer — States It Passes Through (North to South, West to East)

StateKey Note
GujaratWesternmost state on Tropic of Cancer
RajasthanThar Desert region
Madhya PradeshGeographic centre of India
ChhattisgarhMineral-rich tribal belt
JharkhandCoal and mineral belt
West BengalDensely populated Indo-Gangetic plain
TripuraLandlocked northeastern state
MizoramSouthernmost NE state on Tropic of Cancer

Mnemonic: Great Rajputs Make Clever Jawans Win Tough Missions

Table 3: India's Neighbours and Key Boundary Features

NeighbourDirectionKey Boundary/StraitUPSC Relevance
PakistanWestRadcliffe Line (1947); Sir Creek disputeWater disputes (Indus Waters Treaty 1960)
AfghanistanNorthwestDurand Line (Pakistan-Afghanistan, not India now)Terrorism, Taliban; India lost land boundary after 1947
ChinaNorth & NortheastMcMahon Line (unrecognised by China); LACBorder disputes; Doklam, Galwan; BRI
NepalNorthOpen border (Treaty of Peace and Friendship 1950)Kalapani, Lipulekh disputes; Madhesi issue
BhutanNortheastNo formal boundary demarcation completeDoklam; India's security umbrella; hydropower
BangladeshEastTin Bigha Corridor (land enclave exchange 2015)Rohingya, Teesta water, connectivity
MyanmarNortheastNo fence (porous); Free Movement Regime (ended 2024)Northeast insurgency, drugs, Chin refugees
Sri LankaSoutheastPalk Strait (~65 km at narrowest)ETCA negotiations; LTTE history; China's Hambantota
MaldivesSouthIndian OceanIndia Out campaign; Chinese influence; SAGAR

PART 2 — Detailed Notes

India's Hemispheric Position

Key Term

Hemispheric Location: India lies entirely in the Northern Hemisphere (all latitudes are north of equator) and entirely in the Eastern Hemisphere (all longitudes are east of Prime Meridian). This places India in the "north-east" quadrant of the globe — the most densely populated quadrant on Earth.

India's southernmost point on the mainland is Kanyakumari (Cape Comorin), Tamil Nadu. The southernmost point of India overall is Indira Point on Great Nicobar Island (6°45'N), which partially submerged during the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. The northernmost point is Indira Col in the Siachen Glacier region.

Standard Meridian and Indian Standard Time

The 82°30'E meridian was chosen as India's Standard Meridian to give a single time zone despite India's ~29° longitudinal spread. It passes through Mirzapur (sometimes called Naini) in Uttar Pradesh. IST = UTC+5:30 (no daylight saving). India intentionally avoids two time zones to maintain administrative unity, though this causes sunrise at ~4 am in Assam and ~7 am in Gujarat during summer.

India's Size and Population

Key Term

Area: India is the 7th largest country by area (~3.28 million km²). Larger than India: Russia, Canada, USA, China, Brazil, Australia.

Population: India became the world's most populous country in 2023, overtaking China. India's population: ~1.44 billion (UN 2024). India's population density is far higher than China's given similar-era populations — India has ~1/3 of China's land area.

India's Island Territories

Lakshadweep (Arabian Sea): A group of coral atolls/islands; Union Territory; closest to Kerala coast; smallest UT by area; strategically positioned near key oil tanker routes from Gulf. Population: ~64,000 (smallest UT by population). Minicoy Island is the southernmost island, closer to Maldives than mainland.

Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Bay of Bengal): Strategically located near the Strait of Malacca (only ~90 nautical miles from northern tip). Indira Point (Great Nicobar) lies at 6°45'N. The islands are important for India's Act East Policy and naval projection into Southeast Asia. Great Nicobar Development Project (NITI Aayog — holistic development; port, airport, township, power plant) is controversial due to ecological sensitivity (tropical rainforest, Shompen tribal reserve).

Critical Straits and India's Maritime Significance

UPSC Connect

UPSC GS2/GS3 — India's Strategic Maritime Location:

India's peninsular shape gives it commanding presence over two critical sea lanes:

Strait of Hormuz (between Iran and Oman): ~17.8 million barrels of oil pass daily (~20% of world's oil supply); India imports ~85% of its oil needs, much through this strait. Any blockade = energy crisis for India and Asia.

Strait of Malacca (between Malaysia, Singapore, and Sumatra): ~25% of world trade by volume passes through; Andaman & Nicobar Islands sit at the western entrance. India's Andaman and Nicobar Command (only tri-services theatre command, est. 2001) is positioned to monitor/control this chokepoint.

Indian Ocean Region (IOR): India calls itself the "net security provider" in IOR (PM Modi's 2015 Mauritius speech). India provides humanitarian assistance, conducts anti-piracy patrols (especially Gulf of Aden), and operates under SAGAR doctrine.

India's Foreign Policy and Location: Key Doctrines

UPSC Connect

UPSC GS2 — India's Neighbourhood and Indo-Pacific Doctrines:

SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region): Launched 2015 by PM Modi; India's vision for Indian Ocean — cooperative security, maritime safety, sustainable development, respect for international law; counters China's aggressive posture in IOR.

QUAD (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue): India, USA, Japan, Australia; revived 2017 after dormancy since 2008; elevated to leaders' summit 2021; focuses on free and open Indo-Pacific; vaccine initiative (2021), infrastructure funding (via PGII, ITAR, Chip-4 alignment); not a formal military alliance but increasingly coordinated.

String of Pearls (China): China's strategy of building ports and facilities in Myanmar (Kyaukpyu), Bangladesh (Chittagong), Sri Lanka (Hambantota — leased 99 years, 2017), Pakistan (Gwadar — CPEC), Maldives, Djibouti (military base) — encircling India.

Necklace of Diamonds (India's response): India's counter-strategy — naval access/facilities at Oman (Duqm), Seychelles (Assumption Island, pending), Mauritius, Madagascar, Singapore; Listen-in station in Madagascar; base in Agaléga (Mauritius, operational 2023).

Physical Boundaries of India

Explainer

Natural Boundaries:

  • North: The Himalayas — world's highest mountain range; formed by collision of Indian and Eurasian plates (still rising ~5mm/year); natural barrier but historically porous to armies and ideas
  • Northwest: Thar Desert — acts as a natural barrier with Pakistan; hot desert (not cold); sparse population; Indira Gandhi Canal transformed agricultural potential
  • South: Deccan Peninsula surrounded by Arabian Sea (west), Bay of Bengal (east), and Indian Ocean (south) — India is a classic peninsula
  • Northeast: Dense forests, hill ranges (Patkai, Naga, Lushai hills), and Brahmaputra gorges serve as natural barriers; historically the "chicken's neck" (Siliguri Corridor — 22 km wide — connects Northeast to mainland)

[Additional] 1a. India's Maritime Zones — UNCLOS Framework and Deep-Sea Rights

The chapter mentions India's EEZ (2.37 million km²) as a geographic fact but never explains what maritime zones legally mean, how many distinct zones exist, or that India holds sovereign mining rights over a 75,000 km² seabed site in international waters in the Central Indian Ocean Basin. Understanding the UNCLOS zone framework is essential for any UPSC question on India's maritime boundaries, offshore resources, or blue economy.

Key Term

India's Maritime Zones — Four Zones Under UNCLOS:

ZoneExtentIndia's Rights
Territorial Sea12 nautical miles from baselineFull sovereignty — same as land territory; applies to water column, seabed, and airspace
Contiguous Zone12–24 nautical milesEnforcement rights only (customs, immigration, sanitation, fiscal laws) — NOT full sovereignty
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)Up to 200 nautical milesSovereign rights over ALL living (fish) and non-living (oil, gas, minerals) resources; other nations may still sail/fly freely
Continental ShelfUp to 200 NM (or outer edge of continental margin, max 350 NM)Exclusive rights over seabed and subsoil resources regardless of water depth

Legal authority: India's Maritime Zones Act 1976 (predates India's UNCLOS ratification in 1995); UNCLOS 1982 (United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea).

1 nautical mile = 1.852 km

India's EEZ = 2.37 million km² — larger than India's entire land area (3.28 million km²); covering parts of the Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal, and Indian Ocean including areas around Lakshadweep and Andaman & Nicobar Islands.

UPSC Connect

[Additional] India's Maritime Zones, Extended Continental Shelf, and Deep Sea Mining (GS2 — International Law / GS3 — Resources):

India's Extended Continental Shelf (ECS) claim:

  • In 2009-2010, India petitioned the UN's Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) to extend its continental shelf from 200 NM to 350 NM in certain sectors — which would give India exclusive seabed resource rights in those additional areas
  • In March 2023, CLCS rejected part of the claim (Arabian Sea sector) due to Pakistan's objection over the Sir Creek maritime boundary dispute — CLCS cannot decide areas with disputed jurisdiction
  • In April 2025, India submitted revised partial claims for the Central Arabian Sea sector — the process is ongoing; approval would add significant additional seabed rights

India's deep-sea mining rights in international waters:

  • India holds Pioneer Investor status under UNCLOS — granted in 1978 when India was one of the first countries to register deep-sea mining interests
  • ISA (International Seabed Authority) has allocated India a 75,000 km² exclusive exploration site in the Central Indian Ocean Basin (CIOB) for polymetallic nodules
  • Estimated reserves: ~380 million tonnes of polymetallic nodules containing manganese (28%), iron (6%), nickel (~1.2%), copper (~1%), cobalt (~0.2%) — critical minerals for batteries, electronics, and special steels
  • India has explored and mapped the site but has not yet commenced commercial extraction

Deep Ocean Mission (DOM) — India's deep-sea programme:

  • Budget: Rs. 4,077 crore over 5 years (approved Cabinet 2021; Ministry of Earth Sciences)
  • 5 pillars: (1) Deep-sea mining technology; (2) Ocean climate change advisory services; (3) Deep-sea biodiversity exploration; (4) Deep-ocean survey and exploration; (5) Energy and freshwater from the ocean (OTEC + desalination)
  • October 2024 milestone: NIOT (National Institute of Ocean Technology) conducted a successful seabed mining trial using Varaha-3 machine at 1,200 metres depth in the Andaman Sea — collected polymetallic nodules of 60–120 mm size; India's most advanced deep-sea mining trial

India's coastline revision (December 2024):

  • India's coastline was revised from 7,516.6 km to 11,098.8 km (a 47.6% increase) by the National Hydrographic Office using:
    • 1:250,000 scale electronic navigation charts (vs old 1970s maps at 1:4,500,000 scale)
    • Satellite altimetry, LiDAR-GPS mapping, and drone-based imaging
    • The revision captures tidal creeks, estuaries, mangrove channels, and sandbars that were invisible at old map scales
  • No new land was added — only more accurate measurement of existing features
  • Government will reassess every 10 years from 2024-25

UPSC synthesis: Maritime zone framework is tested every few years in Prelims. Key exam facts: Territorial Sea = 12 NM full sovereignty; Contiguous Zone = 12-24 NM enforcement only; EEZ = 200 NM sovereign rights over resources; Continental Shelf up to 350 NM seabed rights; India's EEZ = 2.37 million km²; India holds 75,000 km² in CIOB (polymetallic nodules); Deep Ocean Mission = Rs.4,077 crore; Varaha-3 trial at 1,200m depth October 2024; Extended Continental Shelf claim rejected March 2023 (Sir Creek dispute); coastline revised to 11,098.8 km (December 2024, 47.6% increase). Always: EEZ ≠ sovereignty (other nations can sail freely through EEZ).

[Additional] 1b. India's Living Boundaries — LAC Disengagement and the India-Maldives Reset

The chapter presents India's 9 neighbours and boundary features as fixed geographic facts. But two major 2024-2025 developments show that boundaries are actively managed through diplomacy: the LAC disengagement agreement (October 2024) ending 4 years of military standoff with China, and the India-Maldives diplomatic reset (October 2024) after a serious rupture — both directly flowing from India's geographic position.

Key Term

Key Boundary Terms:

TermMeaning
LAC (Line of Actual Control)The de facto border between India and China in Ladakh, Arunachal Pradesh, and Uttarakhand — NOT a formally demarcated boundary; both sides have different perceptions of where it lies
Forward patrollingIndian Army troops moving on foot or vehicle to the maximum extent they claim as their territory — China did the same, leading to face-offs at friction points
Friction pointsSpecific locations along LAC where Indian and Chinese patrol routes overlapped, causing military standoffs
DisengagementBoth sides withdrawing troops and equipment from friction points to agreed positions — reducing risk of accidental clash
Bilateral currency swapAn agreement where two central banks exchange fixed amounts of their own currencies — provides liquidity to smaller country without using foreign exchange reserves; India provides this as economic support to neighbours
UPSC Connect

[Additional] LAC Disengagement (2024) and India-Maldives Reset (GS2 — International Relations):

India-China LAC Standoff and 2024 Disengagement:

Background: After the Galwan Valley clash (June 15-16, 2020) — in which 20 Indian soldiers and an unknown number of Chinese soldiers died — China's PLA blocked Indian patrolling access at 6 friction points in Eastern Ladakh:

  • Depsang Bulge (Depsang plains, Sub-Sector North) — ~900 km² of traditional Indian patrol area blocked
  • Demchok (South-east Ladakh, near Indus River)
  • Gogra-Hot Springs, Kugrang, Pangong Tso, Galwan (these 4 were progressively resolved 2021-2023)

October 21, 2024 Patrolling Agreement:

  • India and China reached a patrolling agreement for Depsang and Demchok — the last two unresolved friction points
  • Under the agreement, both sides would resume the patrol schedules that existed before the April 2020 standoff
  • Indian Army and PLA troops began joint verification patrolling — first coordinated patrol at Depsang in late October 2024

December 2024 — full disengagement declared:

  • MEA (Ministry of External Affairs) announced: disengagement at all friction points along Eastern Ladakh LAC is "achieved in full"
  • Special Representatives (SR) dialogue on boundary question resumed for the first time since 2019
  • NSA Ajit Doval and Wang Yi (China's Foreign Minister) held the first SR-level meeting (December 2024) in 5 years
  • The October 2024 agreement does NOT resolve the underlying boundary dispute — it only manages the military standoff while political dialogue resumes

India-Maldives Diplomatic Crisis and Recovery:

The rupture (2023-2024):

  • Maldives President Mohamed Muizzu campaigned on an "India Out" platform; won election November 2023
  • Demanded removal of Indian military personnel stationed in the Maldives (operating Dornier aircraft and helicopters for maritime surveillance/search-rescue)
  • January 2024: Three Maldivian junior ministers posted derogatory social media comments about PM Modi → triggered Indian tourism boycott; Indian tourist arrivals to Maldives dropped sharply

Recovery (October 2024 onwards):

  • October 7-10, 2024: President Muizzu made official visit to India; ties upgraded to "Comprehensive Economic and Maritime Security Partnership"
  • India extended: $100 million treasury bill support + $400 million currency swap + Rs. 30 billion bilateral currency swap
  • India's Union Budget 2025-26: Rs. 600 crore development aid for Maldives (up 28% from Rs. 470 crore)
  • July 25-26, 2025: PM Modi made state visit to Maldives — strongest diplomatic signal of reset

Why this matters for India's geography:

  • Maldives is located directly on India's Exclusive Economic Zone's southern edge and astride key Indian Ocean shipping lanes
  • China had been wooing Maldives (Hambantota pattern: loans → infrastructure → strategic access)
  • India's SAGAR doctrine (Security and Growth for All in the Region) sees Maldives as critical for Indian Ocean security — the diplomatic reset is a strategic necessity, not just goodwill

UPSC synthesis: LAC disengagement and India-Maldives reset are GS2 (International Relations) current affairs anchors. Key exam facts: Galwan clash June 15-16, 2020 (20 Indian soldiers killed); LAC friction points = 6 initially, Depsang + Demchok resolved October 21, 2024; SR dialogue resumed December 2024 (Doval-Wang Yi, first in 5 years); Maldives "India Out" campaign = Muizzu 2023; January 2024 derogatory remarks → tourism boycott; October 2024 = "Comprehensive Economic and Maritime Security Partnership"; India Budget 2025 = Rs.600 crore Maldives aid; PM Modi Maldives visit July 25-26, 2025. SAGAR = Security and Growth for All in the Region (PM Modi doctrine, 2015).

Exam Strategy

Prelims traps:

  • Tropic of Cancer passes through 8 states — Mizoram not Manipur; Chhattisgarh not Odisha
  • India's Standard Meridian is 82°30'E, not 82°E or 83°E
  • Southernmost point of mainland = Kanyakumari; of India overall = Indira Point, Great Nicobar
  • India is 7th largest by area (not 6th or 8th); Russia, Canada, USA, China, Brazil, Australia are larger
  • India overtook China in population in 2023 (UN data — not 2022 or 2024)
  • Palk Strait separates India from Sri Lanka; Palk Bay is between Palk Strait and Gulf of Mannar
  • Lakshadweep = coral atolls in Arabian Sea; Andaman & Nicobar = Bay of Bengal (near Malacca Strait)
  • India's only tri-services command = Andaman and Nicobar Command (est. 2001, Port Blair)
  • SAGAR doctrine announced 2015 in Mauritius; QUAD revived 2017, elevated to leaders' level 2021

Mains angles:

  • India's location as both a geographic asset (trade routes) and a security challenge (encirclement by China)
  • How Andaman & Nicobar Islands are India's strategic asset near the Strait of Malacca
  • SAGAR vs String of Pearls — India's response to Chinese maritime expansion

Practice Questions

Prelims:

  1. The Tropic of Cancer does NOT pass through which of the following states?
    (a) Rajasthan
    (b) Odisha
    (b) Odisha (Correct — Tropic of Cancer passes through Jharkhand and West Bengal, not Odisha)
    (c) Chhattisgarh
    (d) Tripura

  2. With reference to India's location, which of the following is the Standard Meridian of India?
    (a) 82°E
    (b) 82°30'E
    (c) 83°E
    (d) 81°30'E

  3. Consider the following statements about QUAD:

    1. It includes India, USA, Japan, and Australia.
    2. It was first formed in 2021 at the leaders' summit level.
      Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
      (a) 1 only (QUAD first formed 2007, revived 2017; elevated to leaders' summit 2021 — so statement 2 is partially wrong)
      (b) 2 only
      (c) Both 1 and 2
      (d) Neither 1 nor 2

Mains:

  1. "India's geographic location makes it both a hub and a target in the evolving Indo-Pacific order." Critically examine. (CSE Mains 2022, GS Paper 2, 15 marks)

  2. What is SAGAR? How does it reflect India's vision for the Indian Ocean Region? (CSE Mains 2019, GS Paper 2, 10 marks)